Allied troops with supplies in the European Theater during World War I. Ox-carts move with supplies. Trees in the background. Soldiers walk with the supplies. Houses and buildings along the sides of a street. German prisoners of war are marched to the stockade. British soldiers with the prisoners.
Albert Thomas, French First Minister of Armament, stands in a field with a french General. A number of French Officers stand behind them. Romanian King Ferdinand arrives with members of his staff and proceeds to decorate French General Henri Mathias Berthelot. Albert Thomas joins Romanian and French officers who congratulate General Berthelot. King Ferdinand stands at the head of several officers and reviews elements of French Army forces as they parade past.
French troops on a battlefield in the European Theater during World War I. Soldiers fire artillery from a hide out. Smoke from firing in the battlefield.
A harbor in the European Theater. Buildings along the side of the harbor. Boats at the sea. A bridge over the water, ships in the background. A ship in view.
The Neues Palais (Am Neuen Palais, 14469 Potsdam, Germany) in Potsdam, Germany. Exterior of the palace. Trees in the foreground of Sanssouci royal park. Exterior of Sanssouci Palace (Maulbeerallee, 14469 Potsdam, Germany) also located in the royal park.
British troops in deep trenches lined with woven branches, on the Western Front in World War 1. Slate refers to gas alarm with Strombos horn. British soldiers immediately don their gas masks and take up defensive firing positions in their trench. Gas fumes are seen drifting over the trench. View from the trench, of gas cloud over No-Man's land, with barbed wire and some snow on the ground. [Note: The Strombos horn,was operated by compressed air and could be heard for several miles. But as use of gas shells increased, and such attacks tended to be localized, other alarms were employed, instead, such as metal shell cases, steel triangles, watchmen's rattles, klaxon horns, etc.] (World War I; World War 1; WWI; WW1)